1 Site of possible old minster church, Nuneaton.
Bassett suggests that St Nicholas, Nuneaton, is the likeliest candidate for an old minster church north of Coventry.
Site of possible old minster church, pre-Conquest, at or near the present church of St Nicholas.
1 A fragment of an Anglo Saxon cruciform long brooch was reported by metal detectorists to Coventry Museum.
2 Illustration in FI file 6982.
Findspot - part of an Anglo Saxon brooch, dating to the Migration period, was found 500m east of Glasshouse Wood.
1 Site of possible old minster church, Monk’s Kirby.
Bassett states that there was ‘undoubtedly’ an old minster here. He adds that its parish may once have been as large as ...
Site of possible old minster church, pre-Conquest, on or close to the present church of St Mary and St Editha.
1 2 Site of possible minster church, Kingsbury.
The parish of Kingsbury is extensive, mostly to the east of the river Tame and along the road from Coventry to Tamworth. In ...
Site of possible minster church associated with present day church of St Peter and St Paul, Kingsbury.
1 Possible minster church, Stoneleigh.
Bassett suggests that Stoneleigh’s church, St. Mary’s, may have been an old minster, and says that there were at least two priests serving it in 1086 ...
Site of possible old minster church pre-Conquest on or close to the present church of St Mary's.
1 Skeletons (no other finds visible) when County Museum excavated bones from under tarmac of street during roadworks here. When constructing lay-by in 1958 further Anglo Saxon finds were also ...
The possible site of an Anglo-Saxon cemetery dating to the Migration period. Four burials and grave goods, including a sword and a brooch, have been found at the site. It is located 1km north east of Churchover.
1 Burials were found in the course of the working of Hall Pit. The cemetery probably also extends into the Hall grounds and SW of Hall Pit. Most of the ...
The site of a cemetery containing Anglo Saxon cremation burials and inhumations dating to the Migration or Early Medieval periods. Brooches, tweezers, and buckles were amongst the objects found with the burials. The cemetery was situated to the east of Baginton.
In Anglo-Saxon times (broadly 410 AD to 1066 AD), what we know as ‘Warwickshire’ was gradually taking shape. Over a thousand years ago, our county would have looked very different. ...